A hydrogen economy is a hypothetical economy in which energy is stored
and transported as hydrogen (H2). Various hydrogen economy scenarios can
be envisaged using hydrogen in a number of ways. Proponents of a
hydrogen economy suggest that hydrogen is an environmentally cleaner
source of energy to end-users, particularly in transportation
applications, without release of pollutants (such as greenhouse gasses)
at the point of end use; and that these advantages may hold similarly
with use of hydrogen produced with energy from fossil fuels, if carbon
capture or carbon sequestration methods are utilized at the site of
energy or hydrogen production.

Meanwhile, critics of a hydrogen economy argue that for many planned
applications of hydrogen, direct use of energy in the form of
electricity, chemical batteries and fuel cells, and production of liquid
synthetic fuels from carbon dioxide, might accomplish many of the same
net goals of a hydrogen economy, while requiring only a small fraction
of the investment in new infrastructure.

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